A PPA is available that installs a build of Windows Firefox and then runs Netflix in Native Silverlight. On WINE of course. It presented as being for Ubuntu but I installed it on Mint13/Cinnamon and it works like a charm.YMMV of course.Linkage:http://www.iheartubuntu.com/2012/11/ppa ... p-app.html

I haven't tried this yet, but from what I've heard it works well, although some people talked about it being a little bit slow (and others about it not being slow). Unfortunately, I'm running LMDE, so I have to do the long and complicated process of compiling wine and doing everything else manually to get it to work .

My Mint box is an old P4@3.06 w/2gig of ram and onboard Intel graphics and this Netflix client runs acceptably fast in the browse interface and the streams play without stuttering. There is the occasional glitch where the mouse pointer briefly disappears but that is a minor gripe.It's good stuff as long and you don't ponder too deeply about the huge blob of proprietary code you just installed

InkKnife, thanks for the link. I tried it on the Linux Mint 13 side of my iMac desktop and this way of running Netflix is as good as on the Mac OS X side. My only complaint is that my desktop seems to get stuck in Netflix and I cannot shut down the computer afterward the usual way, but had to shutdown hard.

3fRI wrote:InkKnife, thanks for the link. I tried it on the Linux Mint 13 side of my iMac desktop and this way of running Netflix is as good as on the Mac OS X side. My only complaint is that my desktop seems to get stuck in Netflix and I cannot shut down the computer afterward the usual way, but had to shutdown hard.

You can't get out of full screen by hitting the esc key or F11?I haven't had any problems with NetflixDesktop at all aside from the pointer disappearing thing and that seemed to just go away by itself.

Nooooooooooo lol i just upgraded to cinnamon 14 a couple of days back!!!! Ive been trying to get this to work for a couple of days now but when i click on the netflix desktop app it just gives me a loading sign on my mouse and nothing happens. Could it be my version of wine or something? can i fix this with a fresh install of netflix desktop app and wine? or did i just install cinnamon 14 at a bad time lol? EDIT* Turns out if I just run it as root it works perfectly the funny thing is it works better than when I watched it on windows I havnt had any loading problems or even studders in watching shows and movies.

jeveleth3 wrote:Nooooooooooo lol i just upgraded to cinnamon 14 a couple of days back!!!! Ive been trying to get this to work for a couple of days now but when i click on the netflix desktop app it just gives me a loading sign on my mouse and nothing happens. Could it be my version of wine or something? can i fix this with a fresh install of netflix desktop app and wine? or did i just install cinnamon 14 at a bad time lol? EDIT* Turns out if I just run it as root it works perfectly the funny thing is it works better than when I watched it on windows I havnt had any loading problems or even studders in watching shows and movies.

I installed this Netflix on a freshly installed Mint14/Cinnamon and the instal took quite awhile and there was a frustrating Microsoft EULA for some fonts that took me two hours of research to figure out how to dismiss. The solution is you use the arrow key to highlight the "OK" so you can hit enter to accept.Other than that it installed perfectly. Maybe you should purge it and start over?From the site linked in OP:

f you had previously tried to install the Netflix Desktop App via our terminal commands from the earlier post, we recommend running the line below in a terminal to clear out any unexpected errors BEFORE trying to install the Netflix Desktop app via the PPA method...

Thought I would ad a long term use review for the benefit of others thinking about this solution.This Netflix client has matured very nicely. The developer has been very active and has pushed out quite a few updates, even got the client to respect the system theme so the experience is almost indistinguishable from a native solution.At this point of development I am comfortable recommending Netflix Desktop to anyone who needs it. It really works nice.

justy39 wrote:I was told 2 days ago, netflix is now working on a linux native client. Which is also removing the DRM. If my sources are correct, this is good news. About time.

This is not really true. It is not a "native" Linux Netflix client. What this application is is a version of the Windows version of Firefox, equipped with Sliverlight, running in WINE.So this is by no means an open source solution.It works well but it is Microsoft DRM.

If Netflix is working on a native linux client, it won't use Wine. But I feel it's doubtful that they'll be producing anything that "is also removing the DRM" since that'd seem to make it much easier for their content to end up being watched by people who aren't paying customers (and I've read that they already estimate about 1/3 of their viewers fall into that category ) - which causes me to wonder just who it was that told justy39 on the 22nd of April that Netflix would be producing a non-DRM client (IOW, was it someone at Netflix who was in a position to know, or is this just a rumor?).

Regards,MDM

_____Proud to be a Mint user running 64-bit Mint 17 XFCE."Change should never be your goal but, instead, only a means to reach your goal."